
Between the early 1930s and the late 1950s, the institutional organization of R&D activities in Argentina was shaped by two diverging representations of science and technology. One of them, embodied by influential representatives of the Argentine scientific community –such as the physiologist Bernardo Houssay, Nobel Prize awarded in 1947–, promoted autonomy, freedom of research, and scientific internationalism. On the other hand, during the period of the rise and decline of Juan Perón (1943-1955), the government sought to integrate science and technology into a State-planned economy. Within this view, science and technology should be oriented to the solution of “national problems”. The final result of this confrontation was a dual institutional complex guided by two divergent ideologies. I intend to summarize this process and to analyze some of its consequences.
01 March 2011, 12:30 – 14:00
Event Type: Seminar
Speakers
Diego Hurtado de Mendoza, Universidad de San Martin
Venue : Room G37 (Senate House, Ground Floor)
South Block of Senate House, Ground Floor
Download a map of the central precinct with directions for getting to the University of London Senate House.

































